US2588413A - Random frequency divider - Google Patents

Random frequency divider Download PDF

Info

Publication number
US2588413A
US2588413A US32457A US3245748A US2588413A US 2588413 A US2588413 A US 2588413A US 32457 A US32457 A US 32457A US 3245748 A US3245748 A US 3245748A US 2588413 A US2588413 A US 2588413A
Authority
US
United States
Prior art keywords
pulses
random
signal
circuit
potential
Prior art date
Legal status (The legal status is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the status listed.)
Expired - Lifetime
Application number
US32457A
Inventor
Erwin M Roschke
Current Assignee (The listed assignees may be inaccurate. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation or warranty as to the accuracy of the list.)
Zenith Electronics LLC
Original Assignee
Zenith Radio Corp
Priority date (The priority date is an assumption and is not a legal conclusion. Google has not performed a legal analysis and makes no representation as to the accuracy of the date listed.)
Filing date
Publication date
Application filed by Zenith Radio Corp filed Critical Zenith Radio Corp
Priority to US32457A priority Critical patent/US2588413A/en
Application granted granted Critical
Publication of US2588413A publication Critical patent/US2588413A/en
Anticipated expiration legal-status Critical
Expired - Lifetime legal-status Critical Current

Links

Images

Classifications

    • HELECTRICITY
    • H03ELECTRONIC CIRCUITRY
    • H03BGENERATION OF OSCILLATIONS, DIRECTLY OR BY FREQUENCY-CHANGING, BY CIRCUITS EMPLOYING ACTIVE ELEMENTS WHICH OPERATE IN A NON-SWITCHING MANNER; GENERATION OF NOISE BY SUCH CIRCUITS
    • H03B19/00Generation of oscillations by non-regenerative frequency multiplication or division of a signal from a separate source
    • H03B19/06Generation of oscillations by non-regenerative frequency multiplication or division of a signal from a separate source by means of discharge device or semiconductor device with more than two electrodes
    • H03B19/08Generation of oscillations by non-regenerative frequency multiplication or division of a signal from a separate source by means of discharge device or semiconductor device with more than two electrodes by means of a discharge device
    • H03B19/12Generation of oscillations by non-regenerative frequency multiplication or division of a signal from a separate source by means of discharge device or semiconductor device with more than two electrodes by means of a discharge device using division only
    • HELECTRICITY
    • H04ELECTRIC COMMUNICATION TECHNIQUE
    • H04NPICTORIAL COMMUNICATION, e.g. TELEVISION
    • H04N7/00Television systems
    • H04N7/16Analogue secrecy systems; Analogue subscription systems
    • H04N7/167Systems rendering the television signal unintelligible and subsequently intelligible

Definitions

  • This invention relates to frequency dividing circuits and more particularly to such circuits in which the repetition frequency of a train of pulses applied thereto is divided in a random manner and a train of pulses of lower repetition frequency is derived therefrom.
  • a key signal for decoding a coded radiated television signal is transmitted to subscriber receiving systems over wire line conductors. It is preferable in such systems that the actuation of the coding circuit for coding the radiated signal and the initiation of the oscillator generating the key signal take place at random intervals to prevent unauthorized interception and reproduction of the coded signal. However, it is necessary for proper synchronization of the subscriber receiver with the transmitter in such systems, that these random intervals be initiated at the time of occurrence of selected ones of the television synchronizing pulses.
  • the present invention is especially suited for the above described type of system for actuating the coding circuit and the key signal oscillator at'random intervals, which intervals are initiated at the time of occurrence of selected ones of the television synchronizing pulses, and which selection is eifected in an entirely random manner.
  • a more general object of this invention is to provide a frequency dividing circuit in which the repetition frequency of a train of electrical pulses is divided in a random manner to produce a train of pulses of lower repetition frequency, the pulses in the lower frequency train being in phase with respective randomly selected pulses in the higher frequency train.
  • Another object of this invention is to provide means in such a frequency dividing circuit whereby the random frequency division may be controlled to take place within certain predetermined limits.
  • Figure 1 shows an embodiment of the proposed frequency divider circuit
  • FIG. 1 shows various curves useful in the understanding of the circuit of Figure 1.
  • the frequency divider circuit illustrated therein has a pair of input terminals I. One of these terminals is connected to ground and the other is coupled to the control electrode 2 of discharge device 3 through coupling capacitor 3, control electrode 2 being connected to ground through grid leak resistor 5.
  • the cathode 6 of device 3 is connected directly to ground, and the anode l of this device is connected to the positive terminal of a source of uni directional potential 8 through load resistor 9, the negative terminal of this source being connected to ground.
  • Anode 7 of device 3 is coupled to the cathode of a unilaterally conducting device l0 through capacitor II, this cathode being directly connected to the anode of a further unilaterally conducting device l2.
  • the anode of device I 0 is connected directly to ground, and the cathode of device I2 is coupled to -ground through a series combination of capacitor I3 and resistor I l.
  • the cathode of unilaterally conducting device I2 is coupled to the control electrode l5 of electron discharge device is through the secondary winding ll of a transformer 18 and a series connected capacitor I9.
  • Device 16 is connected as a conventional blocking oscillator, the anode 20 of this device being coupled to the positive terminal of source 3 through the primary winding 2[ of transformer I B and a series connected load re- Control electrode I5 is connected to ground through a series combination of resistor 23, variable resistor 24 and resistor 25.
  • Cathode 26 of device I6 is coupled to ground through a parallel combination of resistor 21 and capacitor 28.
  • the anode l of discharge device 3 is further coupled to the common junction of resistors 24 and 25 through a capacitor 29.
  • a gaseous discharge device 30 hasits anode connected to the positive terminal of source 8 through a resistor 3
  • the anode of device 3! is coupled to the control electrode 32 of amplifier discharge device 33 through coupling capacitor 34, control electrode 32 being connected to ground through grid leak resistor 35.
  • the cathode 36 of device 33 is connected to ground, and the anode 31 of this device is connected to unidirectional source 8 through resistor 38.
  • the anode 31 is coupled to the cathode 26 of device I6 through a low pass filter 39.
  • Filter 39 may comprise the usual series connected inductance coils 50 and 4
  • the pulse output from the frequency divider circuit is derived across terminals 43 connected to one end of resistor 22 and to ground.
  • Figure 2A shows a train of negative going pulses applied to terminals I and having a certain recurrence frequency. These pulses are inverted in device 3 and appear at the anode I of this device as positive going pulses shown in Figure 2B.
  • the positive going pulses appearing at anode I are utilized to charge capacitors II and I3, capacitor I3 being charged thereby through device I2. After each pulse, capacitor II rapidly discharges through device I0, the capacitor I3 retains its charge due to the unilateral characteristics of device I2.
  • capacitor I3 therefore, builds up in steps, which action continues until the blocking oscillator circuit of device It is triggered thereby, and capacitor I3 thus discharges through a path including the control electrode I 5 and cathode 26 of device I6. This action is shown in Figure 20.
  • the blocking oscillator be triggered by the leading edge of such potential steps so that the output pulses are in phase with corresponding input pulses.
  • the positive going pulses appearing at the anode l of device 3 are impressed across resistor in a differentiated condition, the time characteristics of capacitor 29 and resistor 25 being such that these pulses are differentiated and take the form shown in Figure 2D.
  • the triggering signal applied to the control electrode I5 of device I 6 is the combination of the potential steps of Figure 2C and the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses of Figure 2D, and this triggering signal, hence, has a wave form as shown in Figure 2E, the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses being superimposed on the leading edge of each step of potential.
  • Gaseous discharge device 30 generates a noise signal having random amplitude characteristics, this signal being amplified in device 33 and passed through low pass filter 39 to the cathode 25 of device l6,
  • the critical bias level of control electrode I5 for triggering the blocking oscillator may be varied. This critical bias level is shown as E0 in Figure 2E, and potential peaks higher than this critical level trigger the blocking oscillator circuit. In the absence of the random noise signal across cathode resistor 2'! of device IS, the blocking oscillator may be adjusted to trip due to the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses appearing, for example, on every fourth potential step in Figure 2E, and frequency division of four to one may be derived at terminals #3.
  • the bias of device I6 is changed in a random manner, and the blocking oscillator may be triggered, for example, by the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses appearing on the second or third potential steps in Figure 2E, and randomly divided pulses are derived at terminals 43, as shown in Figure 2G.
  • the amplitude of the noise signal is made small compared to the amplitude of the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses so that the blocking oscillator is triggered solely by these positive peaks, and correct phasing of the divided pulses with respect to the randomly selected one of the undivided pulses is maintained.
  • the present circuit therefore, provides at terminals 83, a pulse train in which the frequency of recurrence of the pulse is a random division of the frequency of recurrence of the pulses applied to terminals I.
  • the pulses derived from terminals 43 are always in phase with respective randomly selected pulses applied to terminals I.
  • any known type of random signal generator may be used.
  • electron discharge device I6 is shown connected as a blocking oscillator, similar types of oscillators such as multivibrators and the like may replace the present blocking oscillator.
  • a system for efiecting random frequency division of a received periodic signal having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each cycle of said received signal; a random-signal generator; a controlled signal generator for producing an output signal in response to an applied control potential of a preselected magnitude large compared to said individual potential increments; and means for cumulatively applying the potential developed in said storage circuit and the output signal of said random generator as a control potential to said controlled generator.
  • a system for effecting random frequency division of a received periodic signal having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each cycle of said received signal; a controlled generator including a trigger circuit for producing an output signal in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold value large compared with said potential increments; a random-signal generator coupled to said trigger circuit for applying a random signal thereto; and means for applying the potential developed in said storage circuit to said trigger circuit to trigger said controlled generator at random intervals determined coniointly by said developed potential and said random signal.
  • vA system for ffecting random frequency division of a received periodic signal having a certain repetition'frequency including; a stora circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each cycle of said received signal; a controlled generator including a trigger circuit for producing an output signal in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold value large compared with said potential increments; a random-signal generator coupled to said trigger circuit for applying a random signal thereto; and means for coupling said storage circuit to said trigger circuit to trigger said controlled generator and discharge said storage circuit at random intervals determined conjointly by the potential developed in saidt storage circuit and said random signal.
  • a system for effecting random frequency division of received periodic pulses having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each of said received pulses; a controlled generator including a trigger circuit for producing output pulses in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold value large compared with said potential increments; a random-signal generator coupled to said trigger circuit for applying a random signal thereto; and means for coupling said storage circuit to said trigger circuit to trigger said controlled generator and discharge said storage circuit at random intervals determined conjointly by the potential developed in said storage circuit and said random signal.
  • a system for effecting random frequency division of received periodic pulses having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each of said received pulses; a controlled generator including a trigger circuit for producing output pulses in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold large compared with said potential increments; a ran-- dom-noise generator coupled to said trigger circuit for applying a random noise signal thereto; a differentiating circuit for receiving said periodic pulses and coupled to said trigger circuit for applying differentiated received pulses thereto; and means for coupling said storage circuit to said trigger circuit to trigger said controlled generator and discharge said storage circuit at random intervals determined conjointly by the potential developed in said storage circuit and said random noise signal.
  • a system for effecting random frequency division of received periodic pulses having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each of said received pulses; a blocking-oscillator circuit coupled to said storage circuit for producing output pulses in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold large compared with said potential increments and to discharge said storage circuit during each opcrating cycle of said oscillator; a random-noise generator coupled to said blocking oscillator for applying a random noise signal thereto; and a difierentiating circuit for receiving said periodic pulses and coupled to said blocking oscillator for applying diiferentiated received pulses thereto superposed on said potential increments to trigger said blocking oscillator at random intervals determined conjointly by the potential developed in said storage circuit and said random noise signal.

Description

March 11, 1952 M. ROSCHKE 2,538,413
RANDOM FREQUENCY DIVIDER Filed June 11, 1948 2 SHEETSSHEET l DIVIDED PULSE OUTPUT ERWIN M. ROSCHKE INVENTOR.
65 m Y XW Il HIS AGENT PULSE INPUT March 11, 1952 E. M/ROSCHKE RANDOM FREQUENCY DIVIDER 2 SHEETS-SHEET 2 Filed June 11, 1948 'Tll i ijii;
H/S AGE/VT Patented Mar. 11, 1952 RANDOM FREQUENCY DIVIDER Erwin M. Roschke, Broadview, Ill., assignor to Zenith Radio Corporation, a corporation of Illinois Application June 11, 1948, Serial No. 32,457
6 Claims. (Cl. 25027) This invention relates to frequency dividing circuits and more particularly to such circuits in which the repetition frequency of a train of pulses applied thereto is divided in a random manner and a train of pulses of lower repetition frequency is derived therefrom.
In radio wire transmission systems, such as those disclosedin application Number 773,848 of the present inventor, entitled Image Transmission System, filed September 13, 1947, and assigned to the present assignee, a key signal for decoding a coded radiated television signal is transmitted to subscriber receiving systems over wire line conductors. It is preferable in such systems that the actuation of the coding circuit for coding the radiated signal and the initiation of the oscillator generating the key signal take place at random intervals to prevent unauthorized interception and reproduction of the coded signal. However, it is necessary for proper synchronization of the subscriber receiver with the transmitter in such systems, that these random intervals be initiated at the time of occurrence of selected ones of the television synchronizing pulses.
Although not limited thereto, the present invention is especially suited for the above described type of system for actuating the coding circuit and the key signal oscillator at'random intervals, which intervals are initiated at the time of occurrence of selected ones of the television synchronizing pulses, and which selection is eifected in an entirely random manner.
It is an object of this invention to provide a frequency dividing circuit, especially suited for use in the above described type of system, in which the television synchronizing pulses are frequency divided in a random mariner to obtain pulses for initiating the above mentioned circuits, the obtained pulses being in phase with respective randomly selected ones of the television synchronizing pulses.
A more general object of this invention is to provide a frequency dividing circuit in which the repetition frequency of a train of electrical pulses is divided in a random manner to produce a train of pulses of lower repetition frequency, the pulses in the lower frequency train being in phase with respective randomly selected pulses in the higher frequency train.
Another object of this invention is to provide means in such a frequency dividing circuit whereby the random frequency division may be controlled to take place within certain predetermined limits.
sistor 22.
The features of this invention, which are believed to be new, are set forthwith particularity in the appended claims. The invention itself, however, together with further objects and advantages thereof, may best be understood by reference to the following description when taken in conjunction with the accompanying drawings, in which:
Figure 1 shows an embodiment of the proposed frequency divider circuit,
Figure 2 shows various curves useful in the understanding of the circuit of Figure 1.
Referring now to Figure 1, the frequency divider circuit illustrated therein has a pair of input terminals I. One of these terminals is connected to ground and the other is coupled to the control electrode 2 of discharge device 3 through coupling capacitor 3, control electrode 2 being connected to ground through grid leak resistor 5. The cathode 6 of device 3 is connected directly to ground, and the anode l of this device is connected to the positive terminal of a source of uni directional potential 8 through load resistor 9, the negative terminal of this source being connected to ground.
Anode 7 of device 3 is coupled to the cathode of a unilaterally conducting device l0 through capacitor II, this cathode being directly connected to the anode of a further unilaterally conducting device l2. The anode of device I 0 is connected directly to ground, and the cathode of device I2 is coupled to -ground through a series combination of capacitor I3 and resistor I l.
The cathode of unilaterally conducting device I2 is coupled to the control electrode l5 of electron discharge device is through the secondary winding ll of a transformer 18 and a series connected capacitor I9. Device 16 is connected as a conventional blocking oscillator, the anode 20 of this device being coupled to the positive terminal of source 3 through the primary winding 2[ of transformer I B and a series connected load re- Control electrode I5 is connected to ground through a series combination of resistor 23, variable resistor 24 and resistor 25. Cathode 26 of device I6 is coupled to ground through a parallel combination of resistor 21 and capacitor 28. The anode l of discharge device 3 is further coupled to the common junction of resistors 24 and 25 through a capacitor 29.
A gaseous discharge device 30 hasits anode connected to the positive terminal of source 8 through a resistor 3|, and its cathode connected to ground. The anode of device 3!! is coupled to the control electrode 32 of amplifier discharge device 33 through coupling capacitor 34, control electrode 32 being connected to ground through grid leak resistor 35. The cathode 36 of device 33 is connected to ground, and the anode 31 of this device is connected to unidirectional source 8 through resistor 38. The anode 31 is coupled to the cathode 26 of device I6 through a low pass filter 39. Filter 39 may comprise the usual series connected inductance coils 50 and 4| having their common junction coupled to ground through capacitor 42. Filter 39 is so adjusted that it passes noise signal frequencies from device 30 up to substantially 200 C. P. S.
The pulse output from the frequency divider circuit is derived across terminals 43 connected to one end of resistor 22 and to ground.
The operation of the circuit of Figure 1 may best be understood by reference to the various curves shown in Figure 2. Figure 2A shows a train of negative going pulses applied to terminals I and having a certain recurrence frequency. These pulses are inverted in device 3 and appear at the anode I of this device as positive going pulses shown in Figure 2B. The positive going pulses appearing at anode I are utilized to charge capacitors II and I3, capacitor I3 being charged thereby through device I2. After each pulse, capacitor II rapidly discharges through device I0, the capacitor I3 retains its charge due to the unilateral characteristics of device I2. The charge on capacitor I3, therefore, builds up in steps, which action continues until the blocking oscillator circuit of device It is triggered thereby, and capacitor I3 thus discharges through a path including the control electrode I 5 and cathode 26 of device I6. This action is shown in Figure 20.
It is desirable that the blocking oscillator be triggered by the leading edge of such potential steps so that the output pulses are in phase with corresponding input pulses. To assure that the blocking oscillator is not tripped by any portion of the individual potential steps except by the leading edge, the positive going pulses appearing at the anode l of device 3 are impressed across resistor in a differentiated condition, the time characteristics of capacitor 29 and resistor 25 being such that these pulses are differentiated and take the form shown in Figure 2D.
The triggering signal applied to the control electrode I5 of device I 6 is the combination of the potential steps of Figure 2C and the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses of Figure 2D, and this triggering signal, hence, has a wave form as shown in Figure 2E, the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses being superimposed on the leading edge of each step of potential.
Gaseous discharge device 30 generates a noise signal having random amplitude characteristics, this signal being amplified in device 33 and passed through low pass filter 39 to the cathode 25 of device l6,
By adjusting the value of resistor 24, the critical bias level of control electrode I5 for triggering the blocking oscillator may be varied. This critical bias level is shown as E0 in Figure 2E, and potential peaks higher than this critical level trigger the blocking oscillator circuit. In the absence of the random noise signal across cathode resistor 2'! of device IS, the blocking oscillator may be adjusted to trip due to the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses appearing, for example, on every fourth potential step in Figure 2E, and frequency division of four to one may be derived at terminals #3. However, due to the pres- 1, ence of the noise signal across cathode resistor 21, the bias of device I6 is changed in a random manner, and the blocking oscillator may be triggered, for example, by the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses appearing on the second or third potential steps in Figure 2E, and randomly divided pulses are derived at terminals 43, as shown in Figure 2G.
The amplitude of the noise signal is made small compared to the amplitude of the positive peaks of the differentiated pulses so that the blocking oscillator is triggered solely by these positive peaks, and correct phasing of the divided pulses with respect to the randomly selected one of the undivided pulses is maintained.
It is apparent that the limits between which said random frequency division occurs may be adjusted by varying the value of resistor 24 which in turn varies the level of Ec in Figure 2E.
The present circuit, therefore, provides at terminals 83, a pulse train in which the frequency of recurrence of the pulse is a random division of the frequency of recurrence of the pulses applied to terminals I. However, regardless of the frequency division, the pulses derived from terminals 43 are always in phase with respective randomly selected pulses applied to terminals I.
Although a particular form of noise signal generator has been shown, any known type of random signal generator may be used. Furthermore, although electron discharge device I6 is shown connected as a blocking oscillator, similar types of oscillators such as multivibrators and the like may replace the present blocking oscillator.
Therefore, while a certain specific embodiment of the invention has been shown and described, it is apparent that modifications may be made Without departing therefrom. The appended claims are intended to cover any such modifications as fall within the true spirit and scope of the invention.
I claim:
1. A system for efiecting random frequency division of a received periodic signal having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each cycle of said received signal; a random-signal generator; a controlled signal generator for producing an output signal in response to an applied control potential of a preselected magnitude large compared to said individual potential increments; and means for cumulatively applying the potential developed in said storage circuit and the output signal of said random generator as a control potential to said controlled generator.
2. A system for effecting random frequency division of a received periodic signal having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each cycle of said received signal; a controlled generator including a trigger circuit for producing an output signal in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold value large compared with said potential increments; a random-signal generator coupled to said trigger circuit for applying a random signal thereto; and means for applying the potential developed in said storage circuit to said trigger circuit to trigger said controlled generator at random intervals determined coniointly by said developed potential and said random signal.
.3. vA system for ffecting random frequency division of a received periodic signal having a certain repetition'frequency including; a stora circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each cycle of said received signal; a controlled generator including a trigger circuit for producing an output signal in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold value large compared with said potential increments; a random-signal generator coupled to said trigger circuit for applying a random signal thereto; and means for coupling said storage circuit to said trigger circuit to trigger said controlled generator and discharge said storage circuit at random intervals determined conjointly by the potential developed in saidt storage circuit and said random signal.
4. A system for effecting random frequency division of received periodic pulses having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each of said received pulses; a controlled generator including a trigger circuit for producing output pulses in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold value large compared with said potential increments; a random-signal generator coupled to said trigger circuit for applying a random signal thereto; and means for coupling said storage circuit to said trigger circuit to trigger said controlled generator and discharge said storage circuit at random intervals determined conjointly by the potential developed in said storage circuit and said random signal.
5. A system for effecting random frequency division of received periodic pulses having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each of said received pulses; a controlled generator including a trigger circuit for producing output pulses in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold large compared with said potential increments; a ran-- dom-noise generator coupled to said trigger circuit for applying a random noise signal thereto; a differentiating circuit for receiving said periodic pulses and coupled to said trigger circuit for applying differentiated received pulses thereto; and means for coupling said storage circuit to said trigger circuit to trigger said controlled generator and discharge said storage circuit at random intervals determined conjointly by the potential developed in said storage circuit and said random noise signal.
6. A system for effecting random frequency division of received periodic pulses having a certain repetition frequency including: a storage circuit for developing an increment of potential in response to each of said received pulses; a blocking-oscillator circuit coupled to said storage circuit for producing output pulses in response to an applied signal exceeding a threshold large compared with said potential increments and to discharge said storage circuit during each opcrating cycle of said oscillator; a random-noise generator coupled to said blocking oscillator for applying a random noise signal thereto; and a difierentiating circuit for receiving said periodic pulses and coupled to said blocking oscillator for applying diiferentiated received pulses thereto superposed on said potential increments to trigger said blocking oscillator at random intervals determined conjointly by the potential developed in said storage circuit and said random noise signal.
ERWIN M. ROSCHKE.
REFERENCES CITED The following references are of record in the
US32457A 1948-06-11 1948-06-11 Random frequency divider Expired - Lifetime US2588413A (en)

Priority Applications (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US32457A US2588413A (en) 1948-06-11 1948-06-11 Random frequency divider

Applications Claiming Priority (1)

Application Number Priority Date Filing Date Title
US32457A US2588413A (en) 1948-06-11 1948-06-11 Random frequency divider

Publications (1)

Publication Number Publication Date
US2588413A true US2588413A (en) 1952-03-11

Family

ID=21865068

Family Applications (1)

Application Number Title Priority Date Filing Date
US32457A Expired - Lifetime US2588413A (en) 1948-06-11 1948-06-11 Random frequency divider

Country Status (1)

Country Link
US (1) US2588413A (en)

Cited By (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2774871A (en) * 1952-09-18 1956-12-18 Rca Corp Counter or step wave generator
US2853605A (en) * 1954-03-05 1958-09-23 Kenneth M Rehler Pulse inverting interstage network of high band width
US2923588A (en) * 1957-12-02 1960-02-02 William F Nielsen Random pulse generator producing fiducial marks
US2949547A (en) * 1958-06-13 1960-08-16 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Delay timer
US20150340183A1 (en) * 2014-05-21 2015-11-26 Mando Corporation Apparatus for controlling solenoid valve and control method thereof

Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2253975A (en) * 1938-09-26 1941-08-26 Radio Patents Corp Distance determining system
US2411648A (en) * 1944-04-21 1946-11-26 Stromberg Carlson Co Method and apparatus for generating impulses
US2450360A (en) * 1944-08-31 1948-09-28 Rca Corp Timing marker and station selection apparatus
US2462265A (en) * 1944-08-16 1949-02-22 Hazeltine Research Inc Frequency divider
US2468058A (en) * 1943-11-23 1949-04-26 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Blocking system for multichannel operation

Patent Citations (5)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2253975A (en) * 1938-09-26 1941-08-26 Radio Patents Corp Distance determining system
US2468058A (en) * 1943-11-23 1949-04-26 Standard Telephones Cables Ltd Blocking system for multichannel operation
US2411648A (en) * 1944-04-21 1946-11-26 Stromberg Carlson Co Method and apparatus for generating impulses
US2462265A (en) * 1944-08-16 1949-02-22 Hazeltine Research Inc Frequency divider
US2450360A (en) * 1944-08-31 1948-09-28 Rca Corp Timing marker and station selection apparatus

Cited By (6)

* Cited by examiner, † Cited by third party
Publication number Priority date Publication date Assignee Title
US2774871A (en) * 1952-09-18 1956-12-18 Rca Corp Counter or step wave generator
US2853605A (en) * 1954-03-05 1958-09-23 Kenneth M Rehler Pulse inverting interstage network of high band width
US2923588A (en) * 1957-12-02 1960-02-02 William F Nielsen Random pulse generator producing fiducial marks
US2949547A (en) * 1958-06-13 1960-08-16 Bell Telephone Labor Inc Delay timer
US20150340183A1 (en) * 2014-05-21 2015-11-26 Mando Corporation Apparatus for controlling solenoid valve and control method thereof
US9697971B2 (en) * 2014-05-21 2017-07-04 Mando Corporation Apparatus for controlling solenoid valve and control method thereof

Similar Documents

Publication Publication Date Title
US2484352A (en) Pulse length discriminator
US2359447A (en) Electrical circuit
US2412991A (en) Radio transmission and monitoring system
US2201978A (en) Frequency control circuits
US2529510A (en) Radio system for measuring distance by phase comparison
US2415567A (en) Frequency counter circuit
US2610298A (en) Stabilized saw tooth oscillator
US2588413A (en) Random frequency divider
US2389004A (en) Keyed multifrequency negative resistance apparatus
US2416327A (en) Transmitter system
US3496473A (en) Automatically tuned communications systems
US2912651A (en) Automatic frequency control
US2566762A (en) Reactance tube control for sawtooth generators
US2401807A (en) Apparatus for and method of pulse keying
US2491804A (en) Synchronizing system
US2619632A (en) Pulse communication system
US2683803A (en) Method of and means for amplifying pulses
US2847569A (en) Relaxation oscillator circuit
US2699498A (en) Pulse time demodulator
US2467476A (en) Frequency divider circuit
US2450443A (en) Limiter
US1596251A (en) Secret radiant telephony
US2631239A (en) Automatic frequency control system
GB1243437A (en) Video signal identification circuit
USRE23932E (en) cough lin